Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Free Treats? NO!

Don't treat your dog unless he does something to earn it. Have him sit or beg or stand or do something you've asked of him before he gets a treat. Why?
  1. Free treats diminish their training value
  2. Treats are like money to people (or allowance to children) they have great value - the dog learns he has to do something to earn a treat
More on what is a "treat":
  • A small piece of kibble is a healthy treat that works as well as other goodies to obtain proper behavior.
  • "Good dog!" -- rewarding good performance with a treat and a good dog, gives the spoken "good dog" power when used without a treat.
  • An activity can also be a treat. Have your dog sit and wait before you throw a ball. Throw the ball and have him wait until you say, "go get your ball!" Don't let him get the ball until he does it correctly. His reward is getting the ball and getting the "good dog!"

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Play Your Dog Smart!

What can your dog learn if learning is a game? What fun tricks will your dog WANT to perform if doing them is part of a game -- a game involving treats and toys and YOU? Dogs are motivated by fun, games, treats and you. Mix in trick training, and you have an engaged, smart, fun DOG!

Try it! Funagle has been given as gifts for Christmas, Birthdays, Mother's Day and Weddings. Yes! Weddings. We will share some of the FUN stories we've heard back from Funagle players.

Stay tuned!

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Teach your dog tricks for even deeper bonding!

Every day KT and I work on learning a new trick. Her hardest trick to date has been "play dead." It took 2 months to accomplish "play dead." I'd have her lie down (she's good at that), then, I'd move a treat in front of her, over her side and around to her back. I gave her time to think about it. She wanted the treat, but wouldn't roll over onto her side. If she didn't do it, I gently rolled her onto her side and said "Play dead!" and treated her.

We worked on this once every morning with 2 attempts. Two weeks ago she finally did it on her own. Why is this important? Because we were working on something together. It was her special time to think, get "alone" attention and to feel accomplished. I never said no to her, just encouraged her with treats, my voice and belly rubs.

As close as we are, training KT to do tricks makes us even closer. Next we will learn "roll over" (this will be easier).

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Old Dog New Tricks - HOUSE BREAKING SUCCESS!

Fergie, a nearly 15 year old Yorkie who had very lax housebreaking habits, now has become a very reliable and housebroken dog. How? We made her go out more often than she needed to and told her to "go potty". When she did we gave her a tiny treat. It took a month, but she is very reliable again. In fact, at lunch time she will go out and pee. Come in for her treat. Then go out again to go poo and come back in for a treat. She knows what she's doing.

We HIGHLY recommend this solution for anyone having housebreaking challenges.